NewsGermany’s Nord Stream 2: New documents reveal deeper ties with Russia

Germany’s Nord Stream 2: New documents reveal deeper ties with Russia

Angela Merkel and Władimir Putin at a conference in 2020.
Angela Merkel and Władimir Putin at a conference in 2020.
Images source: © Getty Images | Adam Berry, Stringer
Marta Bellon

2 June 2024 08:26

Insisting on the creation of Nord Stream 2, Germany has gained a reputation as a country blind to Russian aggression or too enamoured with the possibility of making a lucrative deal, writes "Sueddeutsche Zeitung". The daily won a legal battle and gained access to confidential documents. It writes of a "chronicle of a historic mistake".

"Sueddeutsche Zeitung" recalls that German Chancellor Angela Merkel's government consistently maintained that the Russian Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline was a "private business venture." However, previously confidential documents—revealed by the newspaper—indicate how heavily the authorities were involved in the pipeline's construction and how closely they cooperated with the company responsible for it.

"SZ" obtained the documents because it won a court case against the German Ministry of Economic Affairs.

For the first time, they reveal how persistently Merkel and her ministers, including later Chancellor Olaf Scholz, pushed the project forward. Neither resistance from Eastern European countries, Brussels, or Washington, nor the nefarious actions of Putin's regime could change anything - describes the daily.

Let us recall: Nord Stream 2 was ready at the beginning of September 2021. Russia argued that the pipeline could enhance energy security in Europe. Still, in 2022, Putin maintained that it was not a political project but purely a commercial one. Ultimately, it was never launched.

Germany moved forward. Allies pressured Merkel

A note from the German Ministry of Economic Affairs, now revealed by "Sueddeutsche Zeitung", indicated that Germany would remain dependent on gas imports from Russia for the foreseeable future. "A complete abandonment of Russian resources will be unattainable for years and decades," the document stated.

Instead of reducing dependence on Moscow, the German government is increasing it - stated the previously secret note.

According to "SZ", the documents show that the German Ministry of Economic Affairs was mainly involved in the supposedly private project Nord Stream 2.

The newspaper describes that when Nord Stream lobbyists went to Washington in 2016, the then-German ambassador to the United States, Peter Wittig, defended the planned pipeline at a meeting with critically minded experts, warning against "portraying it as a politically motivated German-Russian project".

In the pipeline matter, Angela Merkel was said to feel pressure from her allies at almost every meeting.

According to "SZ", this is evidenced by notes from speeches. "We are aware of the political dimension of this project and take our partners' concerns seriously, without engaging in a discussion to prevent (this endeavour)" - stated notes prepared for a meeting with Polish Prime Minister Beata Szydło in April 2017.

As early as June 2021, the Polish parliament pointed out the deployment of Russian troops at the Ukrainian border and the threat of a serious armed conflict at the EU's borders - recalls the daily.

On 26 October 2021, the German Ministry of Economic Affairs completed a "supply security review". The conclusions of this analysis are unambiguous: there is nothing to prevent the pipeline from being ultimately approved. But a few months later, Russia conducted a full-scale invasion of Ukraine, and the pipeline was never launched.

In February 2022, Germany halted the certification process of Nord Stream 2, which was supposed to lead to the pipeline's operation, as a reaction to Russia's recognition of two separatist regions in eastern Ukraine. Chancellor Olaf Scholz made the decision.

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